When looking at an object (assuming there is light in the area) your cone shaped retina cells (which are responsible for percieving color) percieve the color of the object. The lens in your eye (a part of the optical anatomy located under the iris) flexes so that the object can become in focus. It has the curved shape of a magnifying glass but can flex at will. However, the shaping of the lens makes the object appear upside down. Your brain automatically flips it right side up. The combination of the colors and focus results in your ability to see the object.
The light passes through your eye straight on. It simply allows your cone cells to percieve color. If light is not present, your cone shaped retina cells (which are responsible for percieving objects without color) come in effect.
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The light passes through the cornea first, then next it refracts and on it goes to the lens where it again, refracts. After going to the lens, the light goes to the optic nerve and the optic nerve carries the light to the visual area of the cortex.
Cornea
Aqeous Humor
Iris
Lens
Vitreous humor
last ...
The parts of the eye that light travel through is the cornea then into the pupil then passes through the lens.
turn off all the lights in the room
shadow
Pupil.
As light enters the eye, it passes through the cornea and the lens and is eventually focused onto the retina.
As light enters the eye, it strikes the receptor cells of the retina, called the rods and cones.
Light bounces off the leaf, enabling the eye to detect its color and shape as light also enters the retina.
the iris
The pathway of light is light through the eye to the cornea. This is the path that light takes when entering the eye.
The pathway of light is light through the eye to the cornea. This is the path that light takes when entering the eye.
Pupil.
Lens
As light enters the eye, it passes through the cornea and the lens and is eventually focused onto the retina.
Light passes through the cornea, the aqueous humor, the pupil (which is just an opening in the iris), the lens, and the vitreous humor on its path through the eye to the retina.
Light rays enter the eye through the cornea.
ROYGBIVRedOrangeYellowGreenBlueIndigoViolet
The retina
As light enters the eye, it strikes the receptor cells of the retina, called the rods and cones.
As light passes through the earth's atmosphere turbulence and density variations slightly deflect its path in a random manner. The light of a star is such a tiny beam as it enters our eye that we perceive this random jiggling and brightness variations as "twinkling". The light of a planet, the moon, or the sun is a much bigger beam as it enters our eye and the random jiggling and brightness variations average out and we see no "twinkling".
the retina! where else, it burns it and riuns your eye